brent.pinheiro@guardian.co.tt
It is no secret that Trinbagonians love two things—to eat and get a discount. T&T Restaurant Week (TTRW) ticks both of those boxes, allowing patrons to try new restaurants and off-menu items at heavily discounted prices.
Now in its 12th year, the ten-day festival has grown from just 15 restaurants in 2013 to 100 restaurants all over the country serving up everything from caprese crepes to plantain-crusted snapper and dragon fruit deconstructed cheesecake, just to name a few.
With all eyes on the chefs for TTRW, it’s an opportunity for them to offer something different to food lovers and to show off their culinary skills and art. Many of the items presented during restaurant week become part of the restaurant’s regular menu, depending on customer feedback.
For the customers, well, they get a three-course meal that can be discounted by up to 40 per cent!
TTRW founder Shira Mohammed likened it to a treasure hunt, telling Guardian Media that diners would often go out of their way to find new menus to sample. She said during TTRW, diners go to restaurants to try them out for the first time and then make a “tack back” to their old favourites.
All the while looking for new and exciting dishes. Zaak Mustapha, the foodie behind the popular social media account Foodie Tales with Zaak, calls the festival a “fantastic gastronomic opportunity to expose your palette to new dishes and experience restaurants that you’ve never been to before.”
Mustapha visited over ten restaurants this year, many of them new to him, looking for the unexpected. His favourite? Zazou Kitchen’s Provençal lamb navarin, complete with market vegetables and basil-whipped potatoes.
According to Mohammed, this year’s festival has been by far the largest, and planning has already started for next year’s edition, which is scheduled for the end of September.